Paradoxical Passages – Ephesians 6:19-20

Ephesians 6:19-20

and also for me, that words may be given to me in opening my mouth boldly to proclaim the mystery of the gospel,
for which I am an ambassador in chains, that I may declare it boldly, as I ought to speak.

Introduction to the paradox and my difficulty with the verse or set of verses

It just didn’t make sense for me, and, as a paradox is wont to do, it took me outside of my usual way of thinking.

Ambassador in chains? 

Maybe the cultural soup I live in is making me struggle with this phrase, but if I listen to the famous preachers on the one eyed bandit, I come away from their message thinking we are only blessed in the physical realm, that as believers in the crucified One, we are kings and queens, ruling over all else, exercising dominion and taking all material wealth simply by claiming it as a right for the child of God.

When Paul describes himself as an ambassador, I relate it to the modern equivalent, one who is protected by the government he or she represents. No harm is to be effected on an ambassador for fear of retaliation from the sending government. There is nothing the ambassador can be charged with in the land he or she was sent to, having diplomatic immunity provided by the host country.

This may be the source of my paradox, for with the modern rights afforded the ambassador, and the influence of the modern preacher telling me I have rights as a child of God to earthly wealth health and prosperity, I come away from this verse with a big ol’ bowl of confusion.

But wait – maybe the confusion lies more in me than the text. If I reject the modern preacher’s cloak of maliciousness, and understand that my view of an ambassador is relatively modern, we may dispense with this paradox swiftly.

Paul uses the term πρεσβεύω presbeúō,, and its base meaning is to be a senior. With a little imagination, my reader may guess this word is related to presbýteros, and speaks of elders within a church body, (or even lends its term to a denomination – Presbyterian).

Paul is referring primarily to his age in this verse and as the aged Paul, he has represented Christ through his journey, which is what an ambassador does. To think of Paul the aged as being chained up in a cold dungeon like jail, as he represents the King of all Creation still hearkens to a paradox, for if those who locked him up understood who he represented, they would realize they are actually locking up the King. 

To chain an ambassador, the King’s representative, is to do do harm to the King. In such instances, the host county would be in danger of retaliation from the King. 

Jesus had his retaliation upon the Roman government, for He eventually conquered that nation, converting vast swaths of Romans to submission to God. 

Maybe the paradox is in our modern understanding of how a believer relates to this old world we travel in!


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